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Science 22 January 1999:
Vol. 283. no. 5401, pp. 480 - 481
DOI: 10.1126/science.283.5401.480

News Focus

AMERICAN ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY MEETING:
A Black Hole's Feeding Tube

James Glanz

AUSTIN, TEXAS--People who go to extremes often make the news, and the same goes for outlandish celestial objects: neutron stars and black holes. At the astronomy meeting here, clues to two mysteries emerged: how black holes fuel themselves and how some newborn neutron stars hide from view. (See last week's issue for earlier reports from the astronomy meeting.)

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